ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Entanglement and weak interaction driven mobility of small molecules in polymer networks

60   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Rajarshi Guha
 تاريخ النشر 2020
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Diffusive transport of small molecules within the internal structures of biological and synthetic material systems is complex because the crowded environment presents chemical and physical barriers to mobility. We explored this mobility using a synthetic experimental system of small dye molecules diffusing within a polymer network at short time scales. We find that the diffusion of inert molecules is inhibited by the presence of the polymers. Counter-intuitively, small, hydrophobic molecules display smaller reduction in mobility and also able to diffuse faster through the system by leveraging crowding specific parameters. We explained this phenomenon by developing a de novo model and using these results, we hypothesized that non-specific hydrophobic interactions between the molecules and polymer chains could localize the molecules into compartments of overlapped and entangled chains where they experience microviscosity, rather than macroviscosity. We introduced a characteristic interaction time parameter to quantitatively explain experimental results in the light of frictional effects and molecular interactions. Our model is in good agreement with the experimental results and allowed us to classify molecules into two different mobility categories solely based on interaction. By changing the surface group, polymer molecular weight, and by adding salt to the medium, we could further modulate the mobility and mean square displacements of interacting molecules. Our work has implications in understanding intracellular diffusive transport in microtubule networks and other systems with macromolecular crowding and could lead to transport enhancement in synthetic polymer systems.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We study the phenomenon of migration of the small molecular weight component of a binary polymer mixture to the free surface using mean field and self-consistent field theories. By proposing a free energy functional that incorporates polymer-matrix e lasticity explicitly, we compute the migrant volume fraction and show that it decreases significantly as the sample rigidity is increased. Estimated values of the bulk modulus suggest that the effect should be observable experimentally for rubber-like materials. This provides a simple way of controlling surface migration in polymer mixtures and can play an important role in industrial formulations, where surface migration often leads to decreased product functionality.
Surface segregation of the low-molecular weight component in a polymeric mixture leads to degradation of industrial formulations. We report a simultaneous phase separation and surface migration phenomena in oligomer-polymer and oligomer-gel systems f ollowing a temperature quench. We compute equilibrium and time varying migrant density profiles and wetting layer thickness using coarse grained molecular dynamics and mesoscale hydrodynamics simulations to demonstrate that surface migration in oligomer-gel systems is significantly reduced due to network elasticity. Further, phase separation processes are significantly slowed in gels, modifying the Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner (LSW) law $ell(tau) sim tau^{1/3}$. Our work allows for rational design of polymer/gel-oligomer mixtures with predictable surface segregation characteristics.
Extensive molecular simulations are applied to characterize the equilibrium dynamics, entanglement topology, and nonlinear extensional rheology of symmetric ring-linear polymer blends with systematically varied ring fraction $phi_R$. Chains with degr ee of entanglement $Zapprox14$ mixed to produce 10 well-entangled systems with $phi_R$ varying from neat linear to neat ring melts. Primitive path analysis are used to visualize and quantify the structure of the composite ring-linear entanglement network. We directly measure the quantity of ring-linear threading and linear-linear entanglement as a function of $phi_R$, and identify with simple arguments a ring fraction $phi_Rapprox0.4$ where the topological constraints of the entanglement network are maximized. These topological analyses are used to rationalize the $phi_R$-dependence of ring and linear chain dynamics, conformations, and blend viscosity. Complimentary simulations of startup uniaxial elongation flows demonstrate the extensional stress overshoot observed in recent filament stretching experiments, and characterize how it depends on the blend composition and entanglement topology. The overshoot is driven by an overstretching and recoil of ring polymer conformations that is caused by the convective unthreading of rings from linear chains. This produces significant changes in the entanglement structure of blends that we directly visualize and quantify with primitive path analyses during flow.
We have developed a new technique to measure viscoelasticity in soft materials such as polymer solutions, by monitoring thermal fluctuations of embedded probe particles using laser interferometry in a microscope. Interferometry allows us to obtain po wer spectra of fluctuating beads from 0.1 Hz to 20 kHz, and with sub-nanometer spatial resolution. Using linear response theory, we determined the frequency-dependent loss and storage shear moduli up to frequencies on the order of a kHz. Our technique measures local values of the viscoelastic response, without actively straining the system, and is especially suited to soft biopolymer networks. We studied semiflexible F-actin solutions and, as a control, flexible polyacrylamide (PAAm) gels, the latter close to their gelation threshold. With small particles, we could probe the transition from macroscopic viscoelasticity to more complex microscopic dynamics. In the macroscopic limit we find shear moduli at 0.1 Hz of G=0.11 +/- 0.03 Pa and 0.17 +/- 0.07 Pa for 1 and 2 mg/ml actin solutions, close to the onset of the elastic plateau, and scaling behavior consistent with G(omega) as omega^(3/4) at higher frequencies. For polyacrylamide we measured plateau moduli of 2.0, 24, 100 and 280 Pa for crosslinked gels of 2, 2.5, 3 and 5% concentration (weight/volume) respectively, in agreement to within a factor of two with values obtained from conventional rheology. We also found evidence for scaling of G(omega) as omega^(1/2), consistent with the predictions of the Rouse model for flexible polymers.
Amorphous organic semiconductors based on small molecules and polymers are used in many applications, most prominently organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) and organic solar cells. Impurities and charge traps are omnipresent in most currently availa ble organic semiconductors and limit charge transport and thus device efficiency. The microscopic cause as well as the chemical nature of these traps are presently not well understood. Using a multiscale model we characterize the influence of impurities on the density of states and charge transport in small-molecule amorphous organic semiconductors. We use the model to quantitatively describe the influence of water molecules and water-oxygen complexes on the electron and hole mobilities. These species are seen to impact the shape of the density of states and to act as explicit charge traps within the energy gap. Our results show that trap states introduced by molecular oxygen can be deep enough to limit the electron mobility in widely used materials.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا